Litcius/Paper detail

Is freezing of gait correlated with postural control in patients with moderate‐to‐severe Parkinson’s disease?

Daniel Boari Coelho, Caroline Ribeiro de Souza, Andrea Cristina de Lima‐Pardini, Renata de Castro Treza, Thiago Kenzo Fujioka Shida, Carla Silva‐Batista, Luís Augusto Teixeira

2020European Journal of Neuroscience15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Freezing of gait (FoG) is one of the main reasons for movement initiation disorders and abnormal coupling of posture and gait in Parkinson's disease (PD). Patients with FoG have poor postural control when compared to patients without FoG. However, the nature of the interrelationship between FoG and domains of postural control remains unknown. The aim of this study was to estimate the association between different domains of postural control and severity of FoG in patients with moderate-to-severe PD. Thirty patients with idiopathic PD with FoG (age range 45-80 years, Hoehn & Yahr stages 3 and 4) participated in the study. We evaluated objective (FoG-ratio during turning task) and subjective (New Freezing of Gait Questionnaire, NFoG-Q) measures of FoG severity, reactive postural adjustments in response to an external perturbation, first step anticipatory adjustment for step initiation and quiet standing stability. In the multiple regression analysis, step initiation was the strongest significant correlation of the NFoG-Q score explaining 23% of the variance of the assessment. For the objective FoG measure, mediolateral CoP amplitude in quiet standing and mediolateral CoP amplitude in step initiation explained 39% of the variance of the FoG-ratio. As main conclusions, this study identified the association between objective and subjective measure for FoG severity and postural control domains. The results support conducting step initiation training during rehabilitation of individuals with FoG.

Topics & Concepts

Physical medicine and rehabilitationParkinson's diseaseGaitRehabilitationPhysical therapyMedicinePsychologyDiseaseInternal medicineCerebral Palsy and Movement DisordersBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments